Kodak Black, whose real name is Dieuson Octave, is facing charges of grand theft of firearm, possession of marijuana, child neglect, two counts of possession of a weapon by a felon and two counts of probation violation.

Kodak was able to message fans via his Twitter account prior to being booked into jail. He asked his fans to write to Willie Ryan at the Broward County Jail in Pompano Beach, where the U.S. Marshals had a hold on him for being a felon in possession of ammunition.

Kodak faced a maximum of eight years in prison after he was found guilty of five of six counts of violating the terms of his house arrest. He had been jailed since Feb. 28, 2017

A Broward County judge granted Lil Kodak a second chance after he expressed remorse for his actions.

“If you can find it in the kindness of your heart, your honor, I am asking you to give me a chance to prove my worth to the court. To be the person my community expects me to be,” Octave told the judge, according to Local 10.

Kodak’s team assured the court Project Baby would do righ.

“We know we won’t let him down this time because Dieuson Octave, not Kodak Black, means so much more to us than him being a celebrity,” Kodak’s assistant, Vanessa Antoine, said, according to Local 10

“His extraordinary creativity and almost overnight success could lead us all to forget he is still a teenager facing temptation most adults would find difficult to manage,” Michael Kushner, of Atlantic Records, said, according to Local 10.

Kodak said his mother’s cries during last week’s hearing deeply affected him.

Kodak’s mother, Marcelene Octave, wailed after hearing her son was found guilty of probation violation.

“My son!” she screamed, according to the Sun-Sentinel.

Kodak reportedly sat silent as he heard his mother’s anguish.

Kodak’s probation officer, Sandy Friedman, was present in as court session to reiterate the rapper’s unwillingness to complete anger management.

“He did not complete anger management, he was thrown out,” Freidman said.

In Kodak’s court hearing, Friedman, streamed YouTube videos in court that showed the rapper’s attitude. In one video, Kodak can be heard yelling and cursing about his efforts to comply with the terms of the mandated classes. In another video, Kodak looks at the camera and says he’s late for a session, then denied being late when he arrives.

Kodak violated his probation by “failing to remain confined to his approved residence except for one half hour before and after approved employment, public service work, or any other special activities approved by the officer […] on various times and dates, as evidenced from the pictures on video showing the offender at various places that were not approved,” the Sun-Sentinel reports.

“After I pushed him away he started swinging his hands towards me, like he was tying to attack me,” Jennifer Cunningham said, according Local 10 News. “As he’s trying to attack me, I’m grabbing (his arms) to defend myself.”

Cunningham admitted she didn’t see a doctor for her injuries until two weeks after the alleged assault. Cunningham did, however, file a report the day of the incident.

“Basically, I was a victim and assaulted by a gentleman that had no right to put his hands on me,” Cunningham said, according to the Sun-Sentinel. “And I don’t tolerate that.”

No formal charges were filed in the alleged incident.

A Miami-Dade police officer told the court Cunningham seemed more interested in her getting surveillance video for a civil case than pursuing criminal battery charges, ABC Local 10 News reports.

“Her case is still open because she hasn’t come in to speak to me,” Det. D.D. Rollins told the Sun-Sentinel.

Cunningham reportedly said the rapper got up on the bar while she was working, preventing her from accessing a cooler to serve drinks to customers. When she asked Kodak to get down from the bar, he made a handgun gesture with two fingers and pushed them against her temple. She pushed Kodak away, and then he started swinging at her, and kicked her near her right shoulder.